![]() Cruz Cares winner: 21 Day Kindness Challenge with 24 schools and 175,000 acts of kindness By Jondi Gumz, Santa Cruz Sentinel SANTA CRUZ >> The leaders of a venture to stop bullying, which in two years has generated 175,000 acts of kindness and reached 24 schools including some in Los Angeles and Baltimore, want to impact more schools and more students. Their 21 Day Kindness Challenge won top honors from the judges in the 2016 Cruz Cares social entrepreneur contest, $2,000 and a package of business services. Justina Bryant, 39, of Aptos, started an after-school kindness club at her child’s school, Rio del Mar Elementary after witnessing a taunting incident there. Wanting to reach all the students, she challenged the school to a 21 Day Kindness Challenge, asking students, faculty and staff to perform five acts of kindness daily. Bryant, who had worked as a teacher and in marketing, understood the time constraints in the classroom so she kept the explanation simple. “It literally takes five minutes,” she said. Yet the effort paid dividends. Students were motivated to be helpful and wrote down positive acts they saw. After a Sentinel reporter wrote about the kindness challenge, American Profile magazine wrote about it, prompting 542 inquiries. Bryant teamed up with fellow parent Christy Tall, 44, who has experience in fundraising and marketing, to create a full-fledged program that is sold on their website, along with blue T-shirts, buttons and wristbands saying “Be Kind.” “It’s designed to be plug-and-play,” said Tall. The two looked into nonprofit status before opting to be a for-profit venture. The basic cost for an average size elementary school of 650 students and 50 staff is $789. Options for smaller and larger schools are available, as are middle school options. A classroom option costing $100 was developed after teachers requested it, and a high school option is being developed with an emphasis on social media, based on Aptos High School’s experience. To help schools launch the kindness challenge, there is an online training portal that includes email updates and customer support. Though the 21 Day Kindness Challenge has reached schools in Silicon Valley such as Atherton High, and some as far as Utah, Ohio and Maryland, Bryant and Tall are proud to see all the schools in Aptos involved. The kindness challenge is underway at Rio del Mar Elementary; Aptos Junior High started Monday. Bradley Elementary will start May 6. Valencia Elementary completed its challenge already and Mar Vista Elementary will do it in the fall. Janneke Lang, founder of The Inspiring Enterprise and the Cruz Cares contest, considered the 2016 competition “a huge success,” bringing 220-plus people to the Del Mar Theatre Wednesday night and topping her $10,000 fundraising goal. She raised $16,000. The top prizes for startups solving social or environmental problems all went to education ventures. Santa Cruz Hive focusing on young adults exiting foster care got second place and Levered Learning producing online curriculum took third place. Gail McNulty, 44, of Santa Cruz Hive, is tapping her experience in the Bronx as rookie teacher of ninth graders ranging in age from 13 to 21. The 21-year-old, a graffiti artist, respected her once he learned she had worked as an art director. Her goal, similar to Thread in Baltimore, is to connect struggling young people, one at a time, with a cluster of caring volunteers, such as college students, a community elder and a professional with expertise in the field the young person is passionate about. She expects all participants to benefit. “You could meet that random person that might open that next door for you,” she said. 2016 CRUZ CARES WINNERS Winners 1st: 21 Day Kindness Challenge Founder: Justina Bryant Website: 21DayKindnessChallenge.org Prize: $2,000, business services 2nd: Santa Cruz HIVE Founder: Gail McNulty Website: www.meetup.com/Santa-Cruz-HIVE/ Information: gail.mcnulty@gmail.com Prize: $1,500, business services 3rd: Levered Learning Founder: Mitchell Slater Information: mslater@levered.com Prize: $1,000, business services RUNNERUPS Footprint Inn: Founder Alicea Cock-Esteb, acockesteb@gmail.com Assure Technologies: Founder Kara Kytle, kkytle@assure-technologies.com Soliculture: Engineeering director Melissa Osborn, melissa.osborn@soliculture.com
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![]() Nan Singleton has started a ripple effect of spreading kindness. In some way, shape or form she has passed kindness on to thousands of people in her community. Nan leads from the heart, is extremely humble by nature, and a giver of so many things. She is a kindness ambassador and she is out making a difference in her world! After reading the article in American Profile Magazine, Nan Singleton, leader of the Sevier County 4-H Teen Council, contacted Justina Bryant, Founder of the 21 Day Kindness Challenge, to see about bringing the Kindness Challenge to schools in Sevier County, Utah. “I was so excited to have Nan contact me about bringing the Kindness Challenge to Utah. I knew from our first conversation that she was going to make a huge impact in her community,” says Justina Bryant. Nan presented the 21 Day Kindness Challenge program to her 4-H teen leaders and asked them if they wanted to bring the Kindness Challenge to their school’s. The teen’s unanimously voted YES! A total of seven schools in Sevier County, UT participated in the 21 Day Kindness Challenge pilot program during the 2014-15 school year. Nan and her crew brought the Kindness Challenge to three high schools, two middle schools and two elementary schools. Each of the 4-H teen leader’s led the Kindness Challenge on their school campus. After completing the 21 Day Kindness Challenge at their school sites, they wanted to continue to spread kindness in their community. With Nan’s assistance, a group of high school 4-H teens organized and led the Kindness Challenge at two of their local elementary schools. “We were so excited to bring the 21 Day Kindness Challenge to our area because 4-H’ers love to make a difference. A little kindness goes a long way! The teens were also excited to pass it on to younger schools,” says Nan. Nan and her team of 4-H teens made a huge impact in their small community. We hope Nan’s story will inspire you to spread kindness in your community and on your school campus. Here are some of the kindness activities that Nan and her 4-H teens did to spread kindness on the seven campus during the 21 Day Kindness Challenge:
These are just a few of the amazing things that were done in the name of kindness. Check out our store to see what program will fit your school's needs.
This documentary was created by a group of high school students. It is a documentary about the 21 Day Kindness Challenge. The students took this on as a class project - Thank You & Great Job!
"We high school students face stress, anxiety, drama, and negativity from time to time the acts of random kindness club strives to make high school a little more Pleasant by conducting uplifting campaigns, activities, And projects, because it's the little things in life that make a difference." ~ ARK Club An amazing group of high school students from Independence High put this short film together. They are all apart of the Acts of Random Kindness club (ARK). This is a group of high school students who want to bring more kindness to their world and the world around them.
Sabrina Ma created ARK in 2011 for the sole purpose of lifting the ‘spirits of herself and her peers.’ The club has grown significantly – ARK is currently at 26 high schools across California. The club members recently created a short film entitled “The Little Things.” This video touched my heart and I hope it touches yours too. – Justina |
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Note From the FounderHello. I am the founder of the 21 Day Kindness Challenge Program. Archives
November 2019
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